 So Resilient Me is a consumer education and awareness tool. It is a unique tool in that it leverages gamification, the concept of gamification to be able to get people to learn about financial decision making and insurance in general. One of the key challenges of penetration in insurance, people do not understand insurance. Insurance in itself is complex as a subject. Even for educated people, even for the high income earners, it's really complex. We wondered how can we get people to understand and appreciate insurance before they actually buy it? Get to understand what you're getting into. They're exposed to so many risks. They are mostly only one risk away from going back into the vicious cycle of poverty. And yet they are not consuming this solution because they don't understand it. When you walk into a shop to buy a product, maybe you walk into a shop to buy a shoe, you'll identify the shoe you like, and then you will be given an opportunity to sit down, try the shoe, walk on it a bit, just experience how it feels on your foot. And then once you have experienced and it feels good, then you can make the purchase decision. But think about how insurance is sold, particularly in Africa and in the Kenyan market. When somebody comes and says you need insurance, what is insurance? It's something that will cover you in the event of this happening, you'll be paid. And you're like, oh, okay. And what do I need to, can I try it? And they're like, well, you don't try, you just buy. And then you trust me that when something happens, you're gonna, I will pay you. And resilient me, it really just mimics real everyday decisions, every day financial decisions. So we have there, it's a card game, and people play it around the table where you're dealt cards. We call them Maisha. Maisha means life. Maisha cards, life event cards. You don't know what life is gonna deal you tomorrow. You don't know what's going to happen. And in the game, once you deal out the cards to the players, then each player will just, you know, flip a card and see what has life dealt me, dealt me, and then you have to deal with that event. So we see where does insurance play in your day to day, you know, life activities. And with that, people get to understand when risks happen, how do you deal with them? What can you do if you have insurance, if you don't have insurance? It leverages a very common African theme of people learning by doing. The best reaction I can say is that people have fun while learning a very complex subject.